I hear noise coming from down the hall. Most likely it’s Transport agents on our trail. I wonder if the agents found the Q I dumped in the bin downstairs. I wonder if the Q had tagents that would trace it first to Marty, then to me. Probably. I’d even bet on it. Even if I escape this, they’ll be looking for me now.
That’s when I see it again. An okcillium ball clamped to the wiring. Just like before.
This time I pull out my knife and take the precious time (time that I don’t really have) to pry the soft metal from the wiring. In a few moments and with a few twists, I work the ball free and drop it into my pocket. Maybe when I’m caught I can bribe the Transport agents with the okcillium and the gold buttons I have with me.
Probably not. Why make a deal when they can just arrest me and take the stuff if they want it?
I’m through the wall, where Kristy is waiting impatiently. She knows what to do but she always has to wait for the dumb human to catch up.
Once I’ve cleared the hole, Kristy darts through the facing apartment and bounces off the front door. Then we’re through the door and running down the hallway, and for a moment I feel like we’re going to make it again. Another narrow escape.
Kristy is ahead of me and she bounds down the stairs at a full gallop. Fur and feet and purpose, and that’s all she is now. This time she doesn’t wait for me at the landings, and I get a bad feeling in the pit of my stomach.
Why isn’t she waiting for me?
Something’s up. I get it. She knows there are Transport agents waiting downstairs, and we don’t have time to go through another wall. I keep following her, but the feeling of loss and despair washes over me like a baptism. Cold fear, unmixed.
I think about dropping the boxes. I should drop them, but I don’t.
I make it to the bottom floor and see Kristy engaged in battle with two Transport agents just inside the door leading to the lobby. One of the agents has dropped his pistol and then landed on it hard when Kristy attacked, while the other one shoots wildly, trying to scare Kristy while not killing his partner. Neither one sees me.
My mind races. Kristy has made this sacrifice for me. To get me out of the building. But can I leave without her? No. She looks up at me and barks twice before launching herself at the standing agent who has his gun aimed and shaking but isn’t firing.
The agent stumbles backward and reaches for the door, trying to effect his own escape. I think about dropping the Brighton boxes again, abandoning the mission altogether, but for some reason I don’t do it. Agent #1 is still down and not moving. Shock and fear, I guess. I think about going for his gun, but he’s lying on it, and I know I won’t get it before Agent #2 cuts me down. I clasp the boxes against my chest with one arm and push myself against the wall near the door. I’m frozen, not knowing what to do.
Then the tide turns.
Kristy takes down #2, dragging him groundward by his arm, twisting it as bone and flesh give way, and his gun hits the ground. I scramble for it and snag it just before he can reach to reclaim it.
I point the gun at the injured agent and Kristy releases his arm. The appendage is bloody and wrecked. Twisted. Like this world and all that’s in it.
“Easy cowboy,” I say. “Don’t get killed over this.”
The agent slides down to the ground in silence, cradling his arm. The fight’s gone out of him.
Once out the door, Kristy and I beat feet through the lobby, and I kick open the front door and we’re onto the narrow street.
That’s when I see the TRACER drone. Too late. It spins on me and I’m trapped.
I see the aiming eye, and think I hear the drone thrum into action, ready to fire. Now I drop the boxes. Finally.
Kristy brushes by my leg and I turn to see her race down the street. All brown and gold and speed. In a split second, the drone that has me dead-to-rights spins and fires at Kristy. But she’s bobbing and weaving as she races down the street, and the drone misses every time.
I aim steadily with both hands and fire, hitting the drone broadside. It sparks and whirrs and spins back in my direction. I fire twice more, hitting it with both shots, and watch as the TRACER spins wildly, sparks flying, crashing into the complex across the street in a brilliant fireball. Another drone buzzes by, seemingly unaware of me or the wrecked TRACER. I figure the last message the downed drone sent was when it fired at Kristy escaping up the block. The second drone is after her now, but she’s long gone.
I gather up the Brighton boxes.
I’m alone.
I made it back to the camp. I don’t know how I did it without Kristy, but I did.
I looked for her on the way. At least I tried to, but the drones were getting too thick in that sector. So I headed to the only place I figured she might go. The refusenik camp. I hoped to find her waiting there for me.
I didn’t even know if the camp would be there. The untagged move around a lot, rarely staying in the same place more than a few nights in a row. There is no real leadership among the refuseniks. No one decides to move the camp. It’s just a feeling that comes over the place and soon one after another of the refuseniks, salvagers, and rebels pack up their meager belongings and shuffle off to the next hide.
But it was there. The camp was. Right where I’d left it. Down in a small valley not far from the cliffs, where rainwater had cut a hide, fifty feet deep and a hundred yards long into the raised limestone floor.
Small fires cast shadows on the valley walls and a sentry, who had no fire, recognizes me as I shuffle down into the hide from the darkness.
The strangers are happy to get the boxes, but I find no joy in delivering them. My eyes scan the camp for Kristy, but I know if she were here, she’d have found me already.
The man who seems to be the leader of the rebel strangers, a man they call Pook, tells me he’s pleased and thankful to get the boxes. I tell him they’d cost me a lot—too much—so I hope he makes good use of them.
“We will,” he says. “I guarantee it.”
I don’t know why I do it, but just then I reach into my pocket and clutch the small okcillium ball. At least I think it’s okcillium. What do I know about okcillium that isn’t rumor or hearsay? I roll it around my palm in my pocket as I stare at Pook, trying to read him.
Friend or foe?
Friend, I think.
Pook is inviting me into the strangers’ small camp for a cup of coffee, but I feel like I hear his voice afar off. Part of my brain is turned off, nonfunctioning, and another part is thinking about Kristy. Only the tiniest bit of my attention hears the word “coffee.”
Coffee? Who has coffee up on the Shelf?
That’s when a blur of motion catches my eye, brown and gold fur catching light from the small fire.
Kristy!
She bounces off me and goes immediately to sniff out Pook and his team.
Satisfied. Friends.
She bounds back into my arms and we both fall to the ground, me laughing hysterically, her licking my face.
Lying on the ground, I see Pook smile. He doesn’t know the story, but he knows it. Know what I mean?
A man and his dog. It’s an old story.
I struggle to my feet, with Kristy trying to wrestle me back to the ground. I reach into my pocket again, grabbing the okcillium ball. I toss it to Pook. He sees it move through the light of the fire and catches it deftly before drawing it up to his face. His eyes narrow and he smiles again.
“Where did you get this?” he asks.
“I’ll tell you for that cup of coffee,” I say.
“Deal. And we have some canned meat for your dog if she likes it.”